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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqis oppose US plan to divide Baghdad into ghettos
By James Cogan
25 April 2007
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The US militarys plan to seal off an entire suburb of
Baghdad behind a three-metre high concrete wall has produced widespread
opposition among Iraqis of all religious and ethnic backgrounds.
Several thousand residents of Sunni-populated Adhamiyah demonstrated
against the wall on Monday behind banners declaring No Shiite.
No Sunni. Islamic Unity and No to the sectarian barrier.
Shiite leaders in neighbouring suburbs have also condemned the
barrier.
The wall is regarded as a symbol of the hated US occupation,
which has brought nothing but daily indignities, hardship and
violence to Iraqis. One of the protest banners declared separation
wall is a big prison for Adhamiyah citizens. Local residents
see the structure as a means, not of protecting, but of controlling
them. According to a survey conducted by the suburbs city
council on Sunday, 90 percent of respondents were strongly opposed
to the barrier.
As part of the Baghdad security plan, US commander General
David Petraeus has ordered that at least 10 of the most volatile
areas of Baghdad be entirely sealed off by such walls. Five extra
US brigades and additional Iraqi Army units are currently deploying
to Iraqs capital to carry out the operation. Once an area
is enclosed, Petraeuss tactics call for American and Iraqi
government forces to maintain bases and conduct aggressive patrols
aimed at flushing out and killing or capturing insurgents.
The western Baghdad district of Ghazaliyah has already been
turned into what US officers have dubbed a gated community.
Ghetto, however, like those established by the Nazis
for Jews in Eastern Europe during World War II, would be a far
more accurate description. The 15,000 residents of the area are
subjected to curfews and can only enter and leave through one
checkpoint, where they are subjected to repeated identity checks
and searches. According to the Washington Post, the US
military intends to begin using scanners to record the fingerprints
and eye patterns of everyone who passes through.
Adhamiyah, with a population of several hundred thousand, was
the next area slated for encirclement. Located close to the city
centre on the east bank of the Tigris River, the suburb was a
popular address for lower-income Sunni Arabs. It is the only eastern
district of Baghdad that has a majority Sunni population. Since
the US invasion, it has been one of the strongholds for anti-occupation
guerrillas and a base of operations against American and Iraqi
government forces.
Adhamiyah is also arguably the frontline of the sectarian civil
war that is raging in Baghdad between rival Sunni and Shiite extremists.
The areas adjoining the suburb are overwhelmingly Shiite and are
politically controlled by the fundamentalist movement led by cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr, which has its headquarters in the densely populated
working class district of Sadr City, to the east of Adhamiyah.
Iraqi police commandos and the Sadrist Mahdi Army militia have
allegedly carried out killings in Adhamiyah in revenge for the
indiscriminate bombings that have been carried out against Shiite
civilians by Sunni fanatics. Adhamiyah locals have formed their
own militia to defend themselves against the incursions of the
police and the Mahdi Army. The suburb is periodically attacked
by rockets and mortars fired from positions inside Sadr City.
US troops began building the wall and sealing in the people
of Adhamiyah on April 10, claiming it would protect them from
militia attack. Lengthy stretches of the concrete wall and barbed
wire obstacles are already place. As in Ghazaliyah, the intention
is to leave only a few entry and exit points and strictly control
all movements in and out. Young Sunni men face the prospect of
being detained for interrogation on suspicion that they have been
involved in the insurgency. The escalation of US operations in
recent months has already seen 5,000 more Iraqis detained. Petraeus
is believed to be expecting to detain tens of thousands more over
the coming months.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki belatedly called for a
halt to the project at a press conference in Cairo on Sunday,
saying, I oppose the building of the wall and its construction
will stop. In a clear reference to the security fence that
the Israeli government has erected to imprison the Palestinian
people in the West Bank, Maliki stated: This wall reminds
us of other walls that we reject.
Malikis opposition to the wall, well over a week after
construction began, was a response to a stream of condemnations
by a range of organisations in Iraq. Heads of the local government
insisted the American military had begun the wall without their
permission. An Adhamiyah resident, Ahmed al-Dulaimi, told the
Guardian: This will make the whole district a prison.
This is collective punishment on the residents of Adhamiyah. They
are going to punish all of us because of a few terrorists here
and there.
Another resident, Khadija Kubaissy, told the IRIN newsagency:
Surrounding our neighbourhood with concrete barriers will
make it clear that when were out of our area were
going to be in danger. Were being forced to live inside
just one area. Our lives will have to be limited to a few square
kilometres of houses and shops. Rather than isolate us, they have
to find a logical solution to the violence and not cause more
suffering and hostility.
The Sunni Iraqi Islamic Party, which sits in the parliament
and cooperates with the occupation, issued a scathing attack on
the wall: Isolating parts of Baghdad with barbed wire and
concrete walls will inflict social and economic damage and it
will lead to more sectarian tension. This measure will harm residents
and it will have a negative impact instead of solving problems.
The Shiite Sadrists, whose six ministers in Malikis cabinet
resigned just over a week ago, also denounced the plan. A representative
in Najaf declared: The Sadr movement considers building
a wall around Al Adhamiyah as a way to lay siege to the Iraqi
people and to separate them into [sectarian] cantons. It is like
the Berlin Wall that divided Germany. This step is the first step
toward dividing the city into cantons and blockading the people
there. Today it happens in Adhamiyah, tomorrow it will happen
in Sadr City.
Confronting growing popular opposition, the position of the
Maliki government is becoming increasingly tenuous. Qasim Dawood,
a member of Malikis Shiite coalition, told USA Today:
The present government is not competent. Its more
or less paralysed, inactive. I doubt very much that this government
can continue in power much longer. Prominent Kurdish parliamentarian
Mahmoud Othman, who supported the government until recently, criticised
Maliki as a weak prime minister and added: This
government hasnt delivered and is not capable of doing the
job. They should resign.
It is by no means clear, however, that the US military will
pay any attention to the Iraqi prime ministers instruction
to stop construction on the Adhamiyah wall, which is a central
component of the Baghdad security strategy. Obviously we
will respect the wishes of the government and the prime minister,
US ambassador Ryan Crocker told a press conference on Monday.
But when specifically asked, US military spokesman Lieutenant
Colonel Christopher Garver refused to state if Malikis instruction
would be followed.
Brigadier General Qassim al-Moussawi, the Iraqi Army commander
working with US forces in the area, bluntly stated on Monday:
We will continue to construct the security barriers in the
Adhamiyah neighborhood. Moussawi claimed the concrete slabs
ringing the suburb were not a wall, but moveable barriers
that can be removed. He dismissed opposition as reaction
by some weak-minded people. Adhamiyah residents have told
the IRIN newsagency that construction is continuing.
If the wall proceeds, in the face of Malikis public statement,
it will be one more nail in the political coffin of his government.
See Also:
Iraq: Nine US troops dead, 20 wounded
in Baqubah
[25 April 2007]
Torture exposed in new US-Iraqi "security
stations"
[24 April 2007]
International conference highlights plight
of Iraqi refugees
[23 April 2007]
Anger erupts in Iraq over Baghdad bombings
[20 April 2007]
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